Tampa Bay Rays

The Rays entered the ninth inning yesterday down 7-3 to the Blue Jays. Luke Scott bunted a single, then Yunel Escobar came to the plate and crushed a two-run homer out of Rogers Centre. While rounding the bases, Escobar took quite the l...
The Rays entered the ninth inning yesterday down 7-3 to the Blue Jays. Luke Scott bunted a single, then Yunel Escobar came to the plate and crushed a two-run homer out of Rogers Centre. While rounding the bases, Escobar took quite the leisurely stroll, and as he crossed home plate proceeded to stop and make an exaggerated safe motion with his arms to the crowd. Escobar had received a roar of boos each time he was up to bat in his first appearance back in Toronto against his former team, and apparently felt the need to express his pleasure at his two-run home run. According to Escobar, he does the safe motion after each home run he hits, not just during this incident. CBS Sports did some digging, and discovered that this is indeed true: TOR@TB: Escobar ties game with solo homer in seventh (via MLB) Though this appears to be the case, Joe Maddon hadn't noticed before, and was not pleased by the gesture: "I love him on this team. I love him in the clubhouse. I love everything about this young man," Maddon said, "but I still want to talk to him about the reaction after the home run, and I'm certain you're not going to see that again." Escobar said that he would happily talk to Maddon, defending that it had nothing to do with that game in particular: "I don't want it to be something more than that," Escobar said. "It's something that I do every time I cross home plate." ... "I'm going to explain to him that I do that every time. I'll be here to talk to him about it. I just care about the team winning games." Former teammate, and the opposing pitcher for his home run, Casey Janssen did not think that it was in any way directed towards him: "I don't think it was directed at me. We were good teammates. I had no problem with him. He had no problem with me. I did hear the chorus of boos and I'm sure he was a little frustrated at times. He's an emotional guy, he's a prideful guy. It was his moment to shine and he did his thing." This isn't the first time Escobar has caused some controversy: last year, while with the Blue Jays, he wore eye black only twice, and both times displayed questionable messages in Spanish. The first received little attention on August 29th against the Yankees, while the second on September 15th accumulated all sorts of bad PR, as it was found to be a homophobic slur. It'll be interesting to see if any repercussions result from the incident, as it was much less controversial than the eye black, which resulted in a three game suspension from the Blue Jays. For the full postgame recap, with details on Odorizzi's first major league start in a Rays uniform, check it out here. Links: - The AL East is the only division this season to have four teams with positive run differentials; sans the Blue Jays, who have the third worst run differential in baseball: -45. - Didn't know this existed until yesterday: the New York Times has a pretty cool feature that provides a running calculation of what MLB teams are paying their players who are on the DL. - Aroldis Chapman blew a save because he pregamed with 18 pastries? - "It's like watching Denzel [Washington] in a movie. Sit down. Watch the show. And enjoy.'' - Barry Bonds on Miguel Cabrera
about 1 hour ago
We’ve got the highlights you won’t see on SportsCenter… Meet Jake Odorizzi, the Rays' 17th pitcher since 2008 ◄ Back Next ► Picture 1 of 8 © The Professor for ...
We’ve got the highlights you won’t see on SportsCenter… Meet Jake Odorizzi, the Rays' 17th pitcher since 2008 ◄ Back Next ► Picture 1 of 8 © The Professor for Rays Index, 2013. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us Post tags:
about 1 hour ago
The 50th game on his suspension was completed in the morning. Had their game not been rained out, I wonder if Charlotte would have been able to activate him later that day. Triple-A Durham Bulls (26-18) Durham was off. Double-A Mont...
The 50th game on his suspension was completed in the morning. Had their game not been rained out, I wonder if Charlotte would have been able to activate him later that day. Triple-A Durham Bulls (26-18) Durham was off. Double-A Montgomery Biscuits (22-22) A day after shutting out Huntsville 3-0, the tables were turned on Montgomery as they fell 3-0 to the Stars. Enny Romero was mostly effective, getting out of any trouble he got himself into without allowing a run. He finished with six strikeouts in six innings, allowing four hits and walking three with 61% of his pitches being strikes. After throwing a scoreless seventh, Marquis Fleming ran into trouble in the eighth, the inning in which Huntsville scored all three runs. The first two batters reached via hit, and both runners would come in to score after Fleming was replaced by Matt Nevarez. Rene Tosoni's two out run scoring double left Nevarez with a run charged to his line too. Montgomery only totaled five hits, two off the bat of Shawn O'Malley. Class-A Advanced Charlotte Stone Crabs (17-25) Charlotte was rained out. Class A Bowling Green Hot Rods (27-16) While it was being announced that Jeff Ames won Midwest League pitcher of the week, Jeff Ames struggled in Bowling Green's 11 inning, 7-6 loss. Ames had not allowed a run in his prior three starts, but the Whitecaps scored five against him in 5.1 innings of work. Four of those were scored on just two swings of the bat, a pair of two run homers by DH Lance Durham, who would also hit a walkoff double in extra innings. Bowling Green had gotten off to a fast start thanks to a leadoff home run by Joey Rickard, but they struggled to maintain a lead all game long. The Hot Rods were outhit 16-9, but they also drew nine walks and stole five bases. Rickard reached base five times. CLICK HERE FOR ALL BOX SCORES Star of the day- Joey Rickard had a pretty fine game that included his first home run of the season. Goat of the day- Jeff Ames had an uncharacteristic off day. Today's games (probables courtesy of milb.com) Durham @ Norfolk 6:35 PM (MiLB.TV)Chris Archer (4-2, 4.38) v.Tsuyoshi Wada (0-0, 6.75) Montgomery @ Huntsville 7:43 PMVictor Mateo* (2-4, 6.86) v. Arcenio Leon* (0-3, 5.96) Charlotte v. Clearwater 5 PM DOUBLEHEADERJesse Hahn (0-0, 1.13) v. Perci Garner (3-0, 2.27)Roberto Gomez* (2-5, 7.58) v. Gabriel Arias* (5-1, 1.69) Both games will be seven innings Bowling Green is off *Listed as TBA on milb.com Scouting the opposition Norfolk Tides (Baltimore)30-14 (1st in IL South)Offense: 237 R (1st) .801 OPS (2nd)Pitching: 3.91 ERA (8th) 1.34 WHIP (5th)Top 30 Prospects: IF Jonathan Schoop (3), OF L.J. Hoes (6), RHP Steve Johnson (16), LHP Tsuyoshi Wada (21), LHP Michael Belfiore (24) Huntsville Stars (Milwaukee)19-25 (4th in SL North)Offense: 163 R (9th) .669 OPS (8th)Pitching: 4.13 ERA (8th) 1.38 WHIP (8th)Top 30 Prospects: RHP Taylor Jungmann (3), RHP Jimmy Nelson (5), RHP Ariel Pena (22), RHP Santo Manzanillo (26), OF Kentrail Davis (28) Clearwater Threshers (Philadelphia)22-20 (3rd in FSL North)Offense: 227 R (2nd) .760 OPS (2nd)Pitching: 3.99 ERA (7th) 1.49 WHIP (12th)Top 30 Prospects: 3B Maikel Franco (5), RHP Kenny Giles (19), OF Kelly Dugan (22), OF Aaron Altherr (30)
about 3 hours ago
Evan Longoria has hit safely in every game since he saw the Toronto Blue Jays earlier this month. View full post on Yahoo! Sports – MLB – Tampa Bay Rays News
Evan Longoria has hit safely in every game since he saw the Toronto Blue Jays earlier this month. View full post on Yahoo! Sports – MLB – Tampa Bay Rays News
about 11 hours ago
about 14 hours ago
In the top of the ninth inning of today’s loss to the Blue Jays, Yunel Escobar hit a 2-run home run that pulled the Rays within two. But it is what he did after the home run that left some people angry. Escobar, as he was crossing ...
In the top of the ninth inning of today’s loss to the Blue Jays, Yunel Escobar hit a 2-run home run that pulled the Rays within two. But it is what he did after the home run that left some people angry. Escobar, as he was crossing home plate, made the “safe” sign in the direction of the fans. It was a move that Escobar makes after most home runs. However, this one felt a bit more emphatic considering the score and probably done in response to the boos he heard all afternoon. The move may have been justified. But it is also easy to see why the Blue Jays, and even Joe Maddon, would not appreciate the move. In the end, it just seems like a bit of a show-boat gesture that didn’t need to be done. In fact, Maddon told the media after the game that he would talk with Escobar and that we won’t see the gesture again… © The Professor for Rays Index, 2013. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us Post tags:
about 16 hours ago
After a sweep it's easy to be overdramatic about a loss. Luckily, neither the start by Jake Odorizzi nor the offense can be to blame, as the Rays 7-5 loss to the Blue Jays can be credited with Josh Lueke's seventh inning appearance. Odo...
After a sweep it's easy to be overdramatic about a loss. Luckily, neither the start by Jake Odorizzi nor the offense can be to blame, as the Rays 7-5 loss to the Blue Jays can be credited with Josh Lueke's seventh inning appearance. Odorizzi began the game with a rough first inning, giving up a leadoff single to Melky Cabrera, followed by a strikeout to Jose Bautista and another single by Edwin Encarnacion. Adam Lind worked Odorizzi in a 12-pitch at bat that resulted in a sac fly RBI to score Cabrera, then Brett Lawrie hit a triple scoring Encarnacion; allowing the Blue Jays a 2-0 lead in the first and 29 pitches from Odorizzi. Evan Longoria led off the second with a single, extending his hitting streak to 14 games and has now reached base in an MLB high 43 of 44 games. Sam Fuld hit an RBI single to score Longoria on a fielder's choice, giving Odorizzi one run of support. In the bottom of the second, another appearance by the human element caused quite the heated reaction from Ben Zobrist, as Henry Blanco hit a ball down the left field line that Fuld fielded perfectly and threw to Zobrist, who tagged out Blanco. Blanco was ruled safe by C.B. Bucknor (shocking) though replay clearly showed that he was out. The mistake came back to count, as Cabrera doubled in Blanco and gave the Blue Jays a 3-1 lead. (via @jasoncollette) The Rays managed to tie it up in the third, via a walk from Matt Joyce, a single from Zobrist, and a double from Longoria that scored both Joyce and Zobrist. Odorizzi settled in, and during the third had his first one-two-three inning, striking out both Lind and Lawrie on his curveball. In his last inning of work, the fifth, Odorizzi again had a one-two-three inning and struck out Bautista for the second time. He retired ten of the last eleven hitters he faced, relying heavily on his four seam fastball and throwing 63% of his pitches for strikes. Odorizzi's final line was five innings pitched, only five hits given up, three earned runs, one walk, and six strikeouts. He threw 92 pitches, so the Rays turned to the bullpen...where Jake McGee was surprisingly dominant. McGee gave a glimpse of his former self when he entered the game, only throwing eleven pitches in his one-two-three sixth, with two strikeouts. It was a pleasant surprise, and hopefully a sign of things to come. The game fell apart in the seventh inning, as Lueke entered and lacked any control, walking Bonifacio, Bautista, and Munenori Kawasaki; then giving up a three-run double to Encarnacion, providing the Blue Jays a 6-3 lead. Kyle Farnsworth came in to relieve Lueke and walked Blanco on two outs, then gave up a triple to Kawasaki, giving the Blue Jays a 7-3 cushion entering the ninth. The Rays attempted a rally on a bunt single from Luke Scott, followed by a two run home run from Yunel Escobar. Something seemed to be brewing as Desmond Jennings singled, then Matt Joyce walked, but Ben Zobrist struck out to give the Rays a 7-5 loss against the Blue Jays to start off the series.
about 16 hours ago
Joe is back with his postgame thoughts … Josh Lueke walked three batters in the seventh today and somehow Joe Maddon thought was in the best interest of the Rays to let him keep struggling and face Edwin Encarnacion with the bases...
Joe is back with his postgame thoughts … Josh Lueke walked three batters in the seventh today and somehow Joe Maddon thought was in the best interest of the Rays to let him keep struggling and face Edwin Encarnacion with the bases loaded. Bases cleared. Game over. Bad decision. Reboot the computer. The peaceful optimist in Joe says this was a game the Rays had little chance to win anyway, with Jake Odorizzi facing R.A. Dickey in Toronto, but that wasn’t the case by the seventh. The bullpen collapsed again, wasting opportunistic hitting by the Rays in the 7-5 loss and choking enough to make a horrendous call against the Rays not even matter. On the upside, Blue Jays fans’ vocal hatred of Yunel Escobar made Joe feel better about the Rays shortstop. © Joe Rays Fan for Rays Index, 2013. | Permalink | One comment | Add to del.icio.us Post tags: Joe Rays Fan
about 17 hours ago
Earlier we showed you a blown call in which it Ben Zobrist clearly tagged a runner before he reached second base. That play cost the Rays a run and the normally mild-mannered Zobrist was visibly upset. Well, the very next inning, Zobrist...
Earlier we showed you a blown call in which it Ben Zobrist clearly tagged a runner before he reached second base. That play cost the Rays a run and the normally mild-mannered Zobrist was visibly upset. Well, the very next inning, Zobrist scored on an Evan Longoria double, and after crossing home plate, he nearly detached Matt Joyce’s hand from the rest of his arm with a violent high-five… if (typeof g_hanaFlash !== 'undefined' && !g_hanaFlash){ jQuery('#hana_flv_flow3_1').css( 'padding', '5px' ); jQuery('#hana_flv_flow3_1').html("Sorry, your browser does not support Flash Video Player "); }else{ flowplayer('hana_flv_flow3_1', { src: 'http://www.raysindex.com/wp-content/plugins/hana-flv-player/flowplayer3/flowplayer-3.2.7.swf', wmode: 'transparent' }, { canvas: { backgroundColor: '#000000', backgroundGradient: 'none',}, clip: { url: '/Videos/ma101.flv', scaling: 'scale', autoPlay: true, autoBuffering: true , onBeforeFinish : function() { this.play(0); return false; } } }); } © The Professor for Rays Index, 2013. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us Post tags:
about 20 hours ago
With one out in the second inning, Henry Blanco hit a ball into the leftfield corner. Sam Fuld made a strong throw back to the infield that appeared to easily beat Blanco to the bag. But after Ben Zobrist tagged Blanco, umpire CB Buckner...
With one out in the second inning, Henry Blanco hit a ball into the leftfield corner. Sam Fuld made a strong throw back to the infield that appeared to easily beat Blanco to the bag. But after Ben Zobrist tagged Blanco, umpire CB Buckner inexplicably called Blanco safe. And it wasn’t even close. Blanco would later score on a basehit to put the Jays up 3-1… © The Professor for Rays Index, 2013. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us Post tags:
about 20 hours ago